Tony

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Viewing 15 posts - 4,876 through 4,890 (of 5,037 total)
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  • in reply to: air quality #491
    bigtreestechman
    Keymaster

    fyi, there's an NOAA air quality forecast page here:
    http://airquality.weather.gov/sectors/northcalifornia.php#tabs
    Scroll over the little squares to see the map for the time and condition you want to see on the map.

    Here's a map of Calaveras County to help get you oriented on the NOAA map.
    joe

    in reply to: air quality #490
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSj–jzvmNs&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]

    in reply to: air quality #489
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    BTV posted a few photos on their FB feed today.  A couple give a longer range view where you can see the haze/smoke.

    in reply to: New Cell Service #364
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I would like to add that we have very good Verizon cell service . Our place is at the corner of Shoshone and Chumash. We have been receiving cell service since December of 2012. The service is so good that we cancelled the ATT land line (which was out more than half the time, anyway).  :)

    in reply to: air quality #488
    bigtreestechman
    Keymaster
    Quote:
    Hoping to come for the weekend. ;D  Would you say it's better to pick another weekend or am I trying to make a decision too soon?  These website pics make everything look clear.  :-

    We will probably be dealing with smoke for a while.  The website pics are all very short distances.  Look out a little further and it's quite hazy looking.  In the early morning it looks more like fog but it's all smoke.  It's so bad over in Sonora / Columbia they have shut down schools.

    in reply to: New Cell Service #363
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    i have a wilson pre-amp and amp. antenna is on the roof.  without it i wouldn't get any service inside.  usually it works well.

    in reply to: air quality #487
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Quote:
    Hoping to come for the weekend. ;D  Would you say it's better to pick another weekend or am I trying to make a decision too soon?  These website pics make everything look clear.  :-

    Smoke conditions change every day. Today there's no sun so far but yesterday the afternoon was nice. Actually the sun is just starting to peep through the smoke as I write this.

    Picture was taken a couple of minutes ago (about 11:40 am).

    in reply to: air quality #486
    bigtreestechman
    Keymaster
    Quote:
    Would you please post an update for air quality? Thank so much.

    The same or maybe a little worse.  Very smoky in the night and mornings  Skies get pretty clear in the late afternoon though you can still smell the smoke.

    in reply to: air quality #485
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Would you please post an update for air quality? Thank so much.

    in reply to: New Cell Service #362
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    The question of whether signal boosters or repeaters will help folks get cell coverage in their homes in Big Trees is a good one. If anyone has success using any of those it would be really helpful to hear that and in what part of the subdivision they have been tried…  :-)

    in reply to: New Cell Service #361
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I have been emailing a sales rep from Wilson electronics for a booster antenna.

    I took some signal measurements and it may work. Let me know if anyone has tried this.

    in reply to: smoke? #471
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Quote:
    When a fire starts in such an explosive landscape, it must be put out right away or it can blow up from a spot fire to an inferno. The DC-10s were late arriving, and in three days the fire grew from 5,000 to 50,000 to more than 100,000 acres.

    This is exactly what I was referring to. It doesn't matter how well the firefighters fight fires, it's how fast they get on a fire when it starts. For those that may not remember, we had a fire on the "real" Boards Crossing Road (the dirt road that goes down to the old Boards Crossing Bridge). Luckily the firefighters had it out in less than half an hour. Had it gotten very big, I'm quite sure a lot of BTV would have burned to the ground.

    in reply to: smoke? #470
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I'm sure there has been forest fires since the beginning of time , the sad thing is, when they're started by mankind !

    in reply to: smoke? #469
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Tom Stienstra, S.F. Chronicle…..good read.

    It is heartbreaking to see the old, giant pines get incinerated by the Rim Fire in the Tuolumne canyons and on their ridges. You wonder if this can be prevented elsewhere.

    The forests around beautiful Cherry Lake and Eleanor Lake in Yosemite are in flames. The beloved Camp Mather and San Francisco’s power and water utilities are under siege. Miles of blackened tree skeletons will be left behind for 20 years and longer. Ash and topsoil will wash into the Tuolumne.

    I have explored this region in my truck, on foot, in a raft and the trail-less canyons from the air. Everybody in the area knew it was a time bomb.

    When a fire starts in such an explosive landscape, it must be put out right away or it can blow up from a spot fire to an inferno. The DC-10s were late arriving, and in three days the fire grew from 5,000 to 50,000 to more than 100,000 acres.

    Environmentalists and fire scientists agree on how to avoid these high-heat infernos that turn into forest massacres, while keeping the forest landscape and habitat fresh and healthy at the same time.

    A key is addressing “ground fuels” and “ladder fuels.” The Tuolumne canyons, for instance, are filled with ground-level manzanita, chemise and layers of dry pine needles. When they ignite, they burn fast and hot, and can catch low-lying limbs of pine trees.

    If you burn out the ground fuel in low-heat prescribed fires, you remove much of the tinder for big fires and keep the soil fresh and charged with nitrogen.

    You also trim the lower limbs of pine trees, up to eight feet above the ground, and thin out tightly-packed groves of smaller trees. That way a ground fire won’t spread “up the ladder” and get into the tree canopies – and in a worst-case scenario, start “crowning,” jumping from treetop to treetop.

    What we’re seeing now is a worst-case scenario. An area many love for recreation, wildlife and the source of drinking water and electricity is a war zone. We are losing the war.

    Tom Stienstra is The San Francisco Chronicle‘s outdoors writer. E-mail:tstienstra@sfchronicle.com. Twitter: @StienstraTom

    in reply to: smoke? #468
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Quote:
    Be safe Chris Westlye, and all you other firefighters.  Anybody still feel the fire fee for the Sierra is not justified?

    YES….It does not change the fact it is an ILLEGAL tax. This is not about fire prevention or fire fighting resources, it is about a state government that has violated its own laws about taxation.  I would gladly pay 10x the fee assessment if I knew the money was well spent and the assessment was legally implemented. The ends do not justify the means when it comes to government. We have laws for a reason….BTW…how much and where have last year's and this year's fire fee $$ been spent????

Viewing 15 posts - 4,876 through 4,890 (of 5,037 total)